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What to do if your Australian partner visa is taking longer than expected

Check the official Australian partner visa timing, compare with similar applicants, and decide what to review before assuming something is wrong.

Official

Australian partner visas: Home Affairs publishes percentile times by subclass and stage; many grants take a year or more

Updated Jul 18, 2026

Shared by readers

Collecting data

0 reviewed submissions so far.

People who started in the same month

Pending

No same-month summary yet.

Australian partner visa timing signals in one view

Compare the official estimate with reviewed timelines from similar applicants.

Official and reader reports

Official wait

Australian partner visas: Home Affairs publishes percentile times by subclass and stage; many grants take a year or more

Australian partner visas: Home Affairs publishes percentile times by subclass and stage; many grants take a year or more

Updated Jul 18

Official waitAustralian partner visas: Home Affairs publishes percentile times by subclass and stage; many grants take a year or more
Shared by readersStill collecting
People who started in the same monthStill collecting

Check what the official estimate actually covers

The official Australian partner visa estimate for Australia is Australian partner visas: Home Affairs publishes percentile times by subclass and stage; many grants take a year or more. That may describe submitted applications, not time spent waiting for an invitation, nomination, eligibility step, biometrics appointment, or document request.

A visa wait feels more manageable when you split it into stages instead of treating the whole journey as one silent queue.

Look for the last real movement on your file

Find the last official milestone: submission, acknowledgement, biometrics, medicals, police certificate, document request, background check, or decision. The useful question is what has happened since that milestone.

Reader-shared waits are still being collected for this service, so do not treat the public sample as a trend yet.

Do not compare across different visa routes

A faster applicant may have a different stream, subclass, program, country checks, family composition, or document history.

If you compare, match the exact route and submission month first. If the public sample is small, treat it as reassurance or context, not proof that your case is late.

Review these before escalating a visa wait

The exact program, subclass, stream, or category.

The date the complete application was received, not just the date you started forms.

Biometrics, medicals, police certificate, document request, and response dates.

Official account messages and contact details, especially if a request could have been missed.

Help improve the wait data

Share your Australian partner visa timeline

Share the date that starts your timeline so other readers can compare similar waits. It takes about a minute, and submissions are reviewed before they affect public wait numbers.

What you add1 starting date
Used forFair comparison
Before publicReviewed

Read Home Affairs percentiles by subclass and stage

Partner visas are two-stage: a temporary grant (820 or 309) followed by a permanent stage (801 or 100), each with its own published percentiles.

Onshore and offshore routes move differently; compare only within the same subclass and stage.

Percentile figures mean some applicants fall outside the common window without anything being wrong.

Keep immigration timing in context

  • This guide is queue context, not immigration or legal advice.
  • Official agency messages and document requests should always override a public estimate.
  • Compare your case only with the same route, category, filing month, and case stage where possible.

Recent Australian partner visa and immigration updates

Partner visa questions couples actually ask

Why is Australian partner visa different from the official estimate?

Official estimates are broad benchmarks. Individual waits can vary because of missing documents, identity checks, appointment availability, workload, and local office capacity.

When should I trust waits shared by readers?

Use waits shared by readers as context once enough similar people have shared their experience. Official agency messages should still come first.